Alison Brown talks the reissue of Simple Pleasures, and her three decades with Compass Records

It’s certainly no exaggeration to say that Alison Brown has helped redefine the role of the banjo in modern music. Her series of solo albums have made that abundantly clear since the beginning, and her interpretive prowess has not only made her one of the most influential artists in all of banjo music, but in the world of popular music in general. As her bio says so decidedly, “As a banjo player, she throws out the textbook when it comes playing the banjo, and the result is a sound that blends the rugged drive of bluegrass with the harmonic sensibilities of jazz… instrumental music has never been so beautifully represented as by Alison Brown.”

No surprise, then, that any number of honors have come her way. In addition to a Grammy and multiple Grammy nominations, she’s also the recipient of the USA Artists Fellowship in Music, and a Distinguished Achievement Award from the International Bluegrass Music Association. In addition, her efforts have led to appearances on CBS Sunday Morning, NPR’s All Things Considered, and in the pages of the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times, among other outlets, and she’s graced the stages of The Kennedy Center, Newport Folk Festival, Telluride Bluegrass Festival, MerleFest, New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, Philadelphia Folk Festival, FreshGrass, The Cambridge Folk Festival, Scotland’s Celtic Connections, the Dublin National Concert Hall, the Galway Arts Festival, and Verbier Music Festival in Switzerland. She and her band traveled to Central and South America at the invitation of the US Information Agency and to Japan as Friendship Ambassadors on behalf of the Nashville Mayor’s office to celebrate a new sister city relationship between Kamakura, Japan and Music City.

As if that wasn’t enough — and it certainly should be considered as such — she and her husband and fellow musician Garry West are the co-founders of the internationally renowned and respected Compass Records, a leading independent roots, folk, and bluegrass label that boasts 1,000 releases under its umbrella, including those on Red House Records, Green Linnet, and Mulligan Records. She also serves on the Board of the Nashville Chapter of the Recording Academy, on the adjunct faculty of Vanderbilt’s Blair School of Music, and remains co-chair of the Steve Martin Banjo Prize.

It was initially a change of course for one who had completed her undergraduate studies at Harvard University and received an MBA from UCLA in hopes of pursuing a career in investment banking. Fortunately, the banjo wooed her away, and after touring with Alison Krauss & Union Station, and Michelle Shocked, she formed her own group, The Alison Brown Quartet, in 1993.

In effect, Brown has returned to her roots with the re-release of her first album, the aptly dubbed Simple Pleasures. An all instrumental album originally released on Vanguard Records — the label that signed her early on — it marked her debut as a solo artist, and featured contributions from Mike Marshall on guitar and fiddle, production by David Grisman, Alison Krauss on fiddle, Matt Eakleon on flute, Jim Kerwin on bass, Mark Summer on cello, Joe Craven on percussion, and, naturally, Brown herself on banjo. It also includes three bonus tracks in the form of demos originally produced by Richard Greene.

Bluegrass Today had the pleasure of speaking with Ms. Brown who graciously recounted her backstory and the trajectory that brought her to today.

So your new album, Simple Pleasures, is really an old album, which, in effect, brings you full circle.

God, I can’t believe that it was released in 1990.

You were you like a child prodigy at the time.

I didn’t feel like a child. I had already like been through a couple of years of investment banking on top of all my other education. But I’ll take the child reference.

So the obvious question is, what’s it like, looking back after 34 years at this album, and more or less rediscovering it? One would imagine it’s like a journey into the past.

It was like finding a time capsule to go back into those tracks. Because a lot of that stuff I hadn’t heard in so long. The record came out on Vanguard initially, and it was recorded at David Grisman’s studio in Berkeley. We did it in the way that records were done back then, which was editing and listening to stuff on cassette. He would just like dump down all the tapes from the session, and so it’s not like I could ever listen to the interplay between the guitar, mandolin, and bass, which that like was just the coolest thing to really hear that dawgy rhythm section on these tunes. We were just trying to pick out the best sections from all the takes to stitch together the final version, if that makes sense.

So was it strange at all to look back on that period of your past?

It really did feel like a trail of breadcrumbs. It was like seeing my younger self, who I really was in my mid 20s. In a way, it was like a trail back to that person. I made this record basically right after abandoning the career path that I thought I was going to be on, and instead of pursuing a white collar job, I really took the road less traveled and decided to ditch it for the banjo. I really didn’t know if I could write a record’s worth of tunes, especially tunes that would not just kind of be rehashes of the music that was already out there. I was trying to do something new, and so as I listen to the music, I can really still hear the feeling of discovery, and the realization that I really could do it, and do it well. I really did have something to say on the instrument that was unique and valid.

How long had you been pursuing music prior to the recording of that album? Obviously one doesn’t make an album out of the blue. What was the lead up to that album?

I started playing when I was a kid, so the album was very much the culmination of that. I had left my day job maybe six months to a year before, and so I just decided that I was gonna take some jazz guitar lessons, because I’ve always just really loved jazz guitar. And I wanted to learn a little bit more harmony, because really, everything I know about music just kind of felt like I was learning on the job, all self taught stuff.

So I did that. And then I just set about trying to write, and these are the first tunes I came up with. And in some of them, I can really hear the jazz guitar lessons. I can hear just like the search for something unique in a lot of the other tunes too. I started playing when I was ten, and I really got serious about it when I was about 12. I just couldn’t let go with that idea.

So in effect, that was your big break. As well as the confirmation that you could do what you wanted to do.

It was the thing that started me on my path, along with playing in Alison Krauss & Union Station. Those are the two things that sort of lit the fire for me to continue to pursue my banjo dream.

So when you look back on this album, do you hear anything that should have been done in a different way?

Is there ever a time that we listen to our work and don’t think that that’s the case? It’s surprised me because I have more thoughts of like giving myself a pat on the back and offering forgiveness rather than leveling a critique from the future. I listened to it, and most of it I thought held together pretty well. I was kind of like giving myself a pat on the back from the future more than cringing. And that was a pleasant surprise.

The recordings you’ve made since have defined a real trajectory for you in terms of style and the way you’ve branched out and incorporated other elements into your music as well. So how would you define your trajectory, now that you have the foundation that you’ve revisited here?

Oh, well ask me something hard why don’t you?

When I went to make this record, I didn’t realize how foundational it really was for everything that I would do later. The elements that are there, even on that first record, like using a flute, or dipping a toe into Latin grooves, or a little bit of jazz in selected spots, that was all part of the initial kernel of the idea. And it was really interesting for me to look back at that and realize that because flute was a presence on that record, and we’ve had a flute player in the band for the last five years, we’ve really kind of like returned to the template that that record created.

I feel like when people listened to that record, and said nice things about it, and with a Grammy nomination and all that, it was really so validating. It encouraged me to stay the course. I was encouraged to continue to explore the outer edges of what you can do with the banjo, exploring the other places that you could take the instrument. So that’s definitely been an ongoing thing. Since that time, I think we’ve gotten way, way better at just kind of exploring the sonics of the instrument, like really refining the sound of the banjo. I’ve really spent a lot of time over the intervening years thinking about how to make the sound fit in the best way in tracks that might not necessarily be like a bluegrass approach. .

That was also evident on your most recent new album, On Banjo, which was a solid definition of the instrument and its possibilities. So it really seems that going from that opening introduction to last year’s album, you can have completed a circle, so to speak.

Thank you. Every time, what you perceive to be some kind of like personal new mountain, you see all the other mountains you didn’t see before. And you know, like, every time you do one thing, it just opens up your mind to other places you can go. One thing that Simple Pleasures didn’t have on it was pianos. Pianos have become a big part of the template for everything I’ve done since then. For example, exploring piano and banjo duets is something that I really enjoyed doing on the new record. That was so much fun to do, and it makes me think that there’s definitely a lot more exploration that one could do in the shorter term in general.

You’ve achieved such standing and acclaim for what you’ve done, and have become one of the most distinctive and prominent performers in terms of banjo playing, and really bluegrass in general. So when you’ve won such praise and acclaim and popularity, it obviously sets a high bar. But can that be intimidating at times? Obviously, you want to make the best record you can make, but are you also thinking that you feel like somehow you’re not only driven to make a great record, but you’re also driven to reach that same plateau? I imagine that could be a bit intimidating if, in fact, that’s the thought process.

I definitely don’t think that. I’ve just spent all these years thinking about this music, and working on my own records, and producing records for other people. I just feel like every one of those experiences makes you better and sharper at your craft. And so now when I go into the studio and start doing something, I feel like I’m getting to draw on the benefit of all those years of experience.

It’s really invigorating and inspiring, rather than intimidating in any way. You get more experienced with what works and what doesn’t work. And so your failures inform you as much as anything that succeeded. They almost give you more information, and help you focus on your path even better.

I just feel really like going back to this record, remembering how it felt not to really know at all what I was doing, and not have any validation. My parents were so skeptical about the idea of like quitting a respectable, coveted position as an investment banker to play the banjo. It was like, what are you doing? But I really had to take that leap of faith on my own. I’m so grateful for all the validation that came on the heels of that record. It’s really empowering rather than anything else.

Simple Pleasures really feels so timeless and contemporary as well. If one were to listen to this record and not know that it’s you, they would think that this is just so fresh and brilliant and contemporary.

Thank you. I really appreciate you saying that. There’s something really special about your first album, and what you’re saying about the purity of it. I can hear that excitement of discovery, because there’s only one first time. So if I only have one, I’m glad that this was the one that I got.

So do you have a new album in the works as well now?

I’m actually working on a project with Steve Martin. We put out a single back in March, and we have another six or seven tunes in the can. Even though I’ve known Steve for a while, just getting to play with him, and do those shows when the Steep Canyon Rangers aren’t available, and sit around and jam, has been really great. It’s been really interesting and exciting.

So will that evolve into an album at some point?

Yeah, that’s the plan. We’re working our way towards that. That’s the strategy because once you put a record out, then it kind of really kills the opportunity to talk about the individual tracks as far as the digital service providers go. So that’s our plan, to just keep releasing singles, and then put a bow on it by combining them into a record. 

You’re clearly a multitasker. You’re an artist, a producer, and you run your own record label with your husband Garry West. So the question is, how do you balance it all? And keep track? It would seem like your efforts have to be split in a lot of different directions. Clearly, you’ve got a lot on your plate.

I find that some days tend to be like music days, like if we’re out on the road, or if we’re in the studio, if I’m producing somebody’s record, or working on stuff on my own. And then other days tend to be more focused on the business side of things. And, yes, it’s a lot to juggle, but in a really good way, because they seem to like inform each other.

I think that doing just one of the things would not be as enjoyable without the other things to balance it. As an artist, knowing what the challenges are in the market, and what the opportunities are, really helps inform the creative side of things. If you don’t know those things, then you might tend to create an album that’s totally in a vacuum without thinking about what the challenges and opportunities are going to be for getting that music heard. If you’re in the trenches every day on that side of things, then you can bring that perspective to what you’re creating, or to what you’re producing for other people. And I think that that’s been a really positive aspect of the juggling.

For me, it works. I mean, it wouldn’t be the right thing for everybody. But I kind of enjoy the challenge of both.

So what’s next for you and the label? 

I’m really excited to be working with Mindy Smith, who has a beautiful new single. And then we’ve got a record coming from Woody Platt, who was with the Steep Canyon Rangers, and that’s a bluegrass record and it sounds great. He’s just such a great singer and such a great curator of songs. It’s got a lot of great picking on it, and a lot of great things, too. So that’s coming out in the fall. I feel like I’m forgetting something, but those are some of the good ones.

Compass Records keeps on keeping on…

I can’t believe it. It’s hard to believe it’s been 30 years.

Leftover Salmon back with Compass Records

Leftover Salmon, among the longest surviving musical outfits of the post-1970s progressive bluegrass scene, has announced their re-signing with Compass Records in Nashville.

Considered by many as the founders of the jamgrass scene, the Salmon has been running for 30 years with their eclectic bluegrass sound, heavily influenced by rock, Cajun, zydeco, blues, and jazz flavors. With original members Drew Emmit on mandolin and Vince Herman on guitar, they trace their musical lineage from New Grass Revival and The Grateful Dead to Little Feat and The Band.

They may not be the ideal act to close a night at Bean Blossom, but Leftover Salmon has a large and constantly growing audience that shows up at concerts and jamgrass festivals in large numbers – when such things are allowed. By mixing bluegrass instruments with an alt-lifestyle persona, and the requisite extended instrumental jams, these guys bring the grass to folks who wouldn’t know Bill Monroe from Chuck Berry.

With Emmit and Herman these days are Andy Thorn on banjo, Greg Garrison on bass, Erik Deustch on keys, and Alwyn Robinson on drums.

Compass Records co-founder Garry West says that they are very pleased to see the band back on the Compass roster.

“Few bands on the acoustic music scene have withstood the test of time and the changes that come with it. Not only has Leftover Salmon managed to do so, they’ve evolved in the process, adding new elements and textures, all coupled with songwriting that just gets better and better. And somehow in the process they have managed to retain their festival campground, bluegrass jam roots. We’re thrilled to be welcoming them back to the Compass fold.”

Drew agrees, saying that it feels like home for he and Vince, and all the guys.

“After putting out LIVE and three solo albums with Compass Records in the past, it’s a beautiful feeling to be back with Garry and Alison and the Compass family.”

A new Leftover Salmon project from Compass is expected by late spring, with new music coming soon. Keep an eye on the band web site for updates.

Alison Brown banjo bag available from Compass

Here’s a Mother’s Day gift idea for the banjo pickin’ mama in your life.

Alison Brown, banjo player supreme and head of Nashville’s Compass Records has teamed up with Raleigh, NC bag maker Holly Aiken to offer a custom-designed banjo bag suitable for use by both mean and women. It’s sized perfectly to carry a tablet (8” x 10” – 1.75” deep) or iPad, and whatever other accessories you need while away from the house.

The bag is based on one Holly makes called the Auxiliary model, which attendees at World of Bluegrass may have noticed displayed during previous events in Raleigh. She made a series of them with banjos, guitars, and fiddles, which are no longer available. Brown and Aiken came up with a new banjo design for the Alison Brown Banjo Bag, which comes with a strap adjustable from 13.5” to 27”.

Alison said that they had been working on this idea since last fall.

“I reached out to Holly after seeing her purses in the Raleigh airport on the way home from IBMA last year. She was really excited about the idea of collaborating on a banjo design and I just got the first batch in time for MerleFest. Apparently her products have quite a reputation among women in NC – a lot of women at the festival shared stories with me about their Holly Aiken/Stitch bags. I’m hoping other folks think it’s as cool as I do.”

Orders from the Compass store will be shipped with two autographed Alison Brown CDs of your choice.

Such a deal!

Check it out online.

Rob Ickes and Trey Hensley to Compass

Compass Records has announced the signing of Rob Ickes and Trey Hensley for the release of their upcoming album, Before The Sun Goes Down. It’s a project that mixes bluegrass and traditional country music with an all-star band behind them.

Rob says that he was deeply impressed by Trey the first time he heard him sing…

“Last year, when we were working on the latest Blue Highway album, The Game, we needed a scratch vocal done on one song so we could play live without having to go back and replace the vocal. The studio owner said he knew a kid nearby who was a great singer and could do it on short notice. So he called Trey in and he proceeded to sing the hell out of My Last Day in the Mines, a song he’d never even heard before! And the way he sang it was so perfect that we couldn’t imagine replacing it or changing anything about it, so his ‘scratch’ vocal quickly became a ‘guest’ vocal.

Later, I saw some YouTube footage of him playing electric guitar and it was obvious he was as strong on guitar as he was on singing. So I told Trey that if there was ever anything I could do to help him in his career, I’d be happy to do it, and soon after, he and his wife moved to Nashville and we started playing the Station Inn on a regular basis.”

And the next thing you know, they have an album ready for release in January of 2015, and an agreement with Compass.

Rob and Trey also have a west coast tour planned for December.

  • 12/4/14 – Royal Room – Seattle, WA
  • 12/5/14 – Green Frog – Bellingham, WA
  • 12/6/14 – Treehouse – Leavenworth, CA
  • 12/7/14 – Little River Inn – Little River, CA
  • 12/9/14 – Tallman Hotel – Upper Lake, CA
  • 12/10/14 – TBA, Redding, CA
  • 12/11/14 – Don Quixote’s – Felton, CA
  • 12/12/14 – Boulevard Music – Culver City, CA
  • 12/13/14 – Powerhouse – Del Mar, CA
  • 12/14/14 – TBA, Sonora, CA

John Cowan to Compass Records

When Lisa Jacobi ran her interview with John Cowan earlier this month, she must have used the word “compass” nine or ten times. Was she getting a vibe from Cowan about his next move, or perhaps trying to telegraph news that she had accepted in confidence?

In either event, the word is out. Compass Records has announced that Cowan has signed with the label, and that his next album, SIXTY, will be released some time this summer.

As has been his long-time approach, the style will be a mix of his wide and varied musical interests. Over the past 35 years he has worked in bluegrass, rock and blues, putting his unique vocal skills at the service of one or all. He has selected his current Doobie Brothers bandmate John McPhee as producer, and they have been tracking of late with guests like Alison Krauss, Leon Russell, Sam Bush and Rodney Crowell.

There haven’t been many other details disclosed to this point, but we’ll be sure to update what we may learn.

Love Has Wheels from The Bankesters Sept. 24

Compass Records has released a music video to promote the September 24 release of their debut album with The Bankesters, Love Has Wheels. It’s the appealing family band’s first project with a label after a string of successful, independently-produced records.

Love Has Wheels features the regular lineup (singing sisters Emily Bankester on fiddle, Alysha Bankester on mandolin, and Melissa Bankester Triplett on bass, with Kyle Triplett on banjo, and mom Dorene and dad Phil on guitars), along with guest artists Sierra Hull, Josh Williams, Rob Ickes, Jim Hurst, Kenny Malone, and Larry Atamanuik.

In advance of the official release, which will occur on the opening day of the IBMA World of Bluegrass, Compass has shared this video for the song, Time And Love.

 

Pre-orders can be placed now on the Compass web site.

Michael Cleveland signs with Compass Records

Compass Records has today announced that bluegrass fiddle phenom Michael Cleveland has signed with the label. He and his band, Flamekeeper, will start work later this year on a new project, expected for a 2014 release.

Michael sees this as a good move in his career.

“I’m so excited to be working with everyone at Compass Records! I think this opportunity will help introduce our music to people that might not have heard us before, and also keep our long-time fan base coming back for more.”

We’ll report further details on this next CD as we learn them.

Bankesters sign with Compass

Compass Records has announced the signing of bluegrass group The Bankesters to their roster of artists. The label will re-release the band’s current album, Looking Forward, to their distribution network on May 28, with a new band project to follow this Fall.

The group consists of parents Phil and Dorene Bankester, with siblings Melissa, Emily and Alysha, and Melissa’s husband Kyle Triplett.

The evolution of the group has been carefully managed, ensuring that the girls had both a professional and a personal life, and their three albums have showed dramatic leaps in maturity, each in turn. The young Bankester ladies have become fine pickers and singers, with able support from their parents, and a spouse.

Papa Phil shared a few thoughts…

“We are thrilled to join the Compass Records family. We first met Alison and Garry at IBMA’s World Of Bluegrass last fall, and they both impressed us as great people who would be fun to work with as well as experienced professionals who could help us continue to grow further musically and professionally. We’re extremely grateful for all the support and encouragement we’ve had from Tom T. and Dixie Hall & Blue Circle Records with our last two projects, as well as the skills and dedication of Stephen Mougin who produced and engineered the last one.

We’re finalizing material selections for the new recording and excited about working with Alison Brown.”

We’ll certainly look forward to their first Compass project later this year.

Compass signs Dirty Kitchen

Things are cooking for Frank Solivan and Dirty Kitchen, literally and figuratively.

During the D.C. Bluegrass Union Festival over the weekend in the suburbs of Washington, D.C., Solivan announced that the band landed a new record deal in time for unveiling its second album. On the Edge will be released April 30 by Compass Records.

“We’re really excited about it, partnering with such a great company,” Solivan told Bluegrass Today before playing a blistering set for several hundred folks who shook off the winter doldrums to attend one of the region’s earliest festivals. (It was, thankfully, indoors.) “Their artists get a lot of attention and a lot of airplay. I’m really stoked.”

An announcement from Compass is expected shortly.

The band recorded the album last summer and did some tweaking in the fall while Solivan tried to figure out how to get it in the hands of fans. That question was answered when Compass came knocking.

This is the first recording for the band’s current lineup – Solivan on mandolin and fiddle, and handling most of the lead vocals; Mike Munford on banjo; Danny Booth on bass, and Chris Luquette on guitar – though the foursome has been performing together since last year.

“I’m really excited for people to hear the new sound of the band,” Solivan said. Most of the details are still under wraps, but there are a couple of nuggets we can share. Rob Ickes makes a guest appearance on dobro and Tim O’Brien sings with Solivan on On The Edge of Letting Go. The band will also offer a cover of Alex Chilton’s “The Letter.” Based on a live performance I caught last fall at IBMA’s World of Bluegrass, that one should be a real burner.

Folks who attend the album release party, scheduled for April 20 in D.C., will get to see Solivan marrying his two main interests, music and cooking. He’s planning a small feast, including a Caprese salad with roasted tomatoes, mozzarella and pine nut pesto, saffron risotto and his special meatballs and sauce. The event will be held at the Hill Center, an education and arts facility at the Old Naval Hospital, which was built during the Civil War.

Fans who want more than a meal and a CD to remember the band by can check out the jewelry made by Solivan’s wife, Leah Sturgis. Her newest creations are made from worn strings removed from Solivan’s mandolin and Luquette’s guitar. She’s promising to incorporate Booth’s bass strings into her work as well. She sells her wares at some festivals that the band plays, and is quick to joke that each purchase helps put gas in the band’s vehicle.

More information about the band is available at www.dirtykitchen.com. Leah’s web site is www.LeahSturgis.com.

 

Look for a video interview with Frank later this morning.

Claire Lynch to Compass

Compass Records has announced that Claire Lynch has signed a multi-album with the label, continuing their push to add more bluegrass-related acts to the roster. Other recent signees include The Gibson Brothers, Dale Ann Bradley, Larry Stephenson and Special Consensus.

Claire and her talented band will be heading into the Compass studio in Nashville this Fall, with plans for an early 2013 release for the new project. With her will be Bryan McDowell on mandolin, Matt Wingate on guitar, and Mark Schatz on bass. A number of special guest appearances are anticipated as well.

She shared her appreciation and respect for Compass, and its founders, Alison Brown and Garry West.

“I met Garry West on his first day in Nashville, many moons ago when we’d both been called to rehearsal for a Patty Loveless TV show taping. I’ve been lucky enough to know Alison Brown for almost as long – she’s graced many of my recordings with her astonishing banjo-playing. Since early on, I’ve watched my two friends’ amazing journey as they’ve moved Compass Records to the forefront of acoustic-friendly labels.

Out on the street, their company is perceived as ‘of the artists, by the artists and for the artists.’ Here’s the proof – just look at their impressive catalog!

I’m delighted to be added to the illustrious roster at Compass. Let the creativity begin!”

We’ll be sure to report anything else we can learn about Claire’s next record.

© Bluegrass Today [year]
powered by AhSo

Exit mobile version